Man Accused of $37 Billion LA Fire Is Innocent, His Lawyer Says
(Bloomberg) -- Jonathan Rinderknecht has been wrongly accused of starting the most destructive wildfire in Los Angeles history, his lawyer told a jury. Rinderknecht was
(Bloomberg) -- Jonathan Rinderknecht has been wrongly accused of starting the most destructive wildfire in Los Angeles history, his lawyer told a jury. Rinderknecht was watching New Yearâs Eve fireworks on a hillside in the Pacific Palisades and called 911 just after midnight on the morning of Jan. 1, 2025, as a âconcerned citizenâ to report a brush fire, only to be charged nine months later with arson, defense attorney Steve Haney said at the start of his clientâs trial in Los Angeles federal court. âThere wonât be any proof that Jonathan Rinderknecht started that fire,â Haney said. The evidence âwill show panic, it will show confusion it will show a frightened young man repeatedly and desperately calling for help from the hillside.â A federal prosecutor told jurors that Rinderknecht hiked to a spot known as Hidden Buddha Hill, above a neighborhood filled with multimillion-dollar homes stretching down to Malibu on the coast, and intentionally set a fire in the bushes with a barbecue lighter later found in his car.
In his opening statement, Assistant US Attorney Matthew OâBrien showed jurors large images taken from surveillance cameras that showed the eruption of the fire that night. He said investigators had traced Rinderknechtâs movements while he used his cell phone. The data placed Rinderknecht at the place where investigators later concluded was the fireâs point of origin, OâBrien said. The blaze heâs accused of igniting, known as the Lachman Fire, was contained by firefighters, but was allegedly rekindled on Jan. 7, 2025, by hurricane-force winds, morphing into a massive conflagration, the Palisades Fire, that killed at least 12 people, charred more than 23,000 acres and destroyed or damaged almost 8,000 structures. Insured losses from the fire were estimated by Gallagher Re at $23 billion, while total economic losses were projected at $37 billion. Rinderknecht, who had lived in the area, was working as an Uber driver and dropped off a passenger near where the fire started, according to the government. Haney claims Rinderknecht has been made a âscapegoatâ for the failure of firefighters to fully extinguish the Jan.
1 blaze before its embers flared up six days later. The government says Rinderknecht was bent on destruction. Prosecutors in the office of Los Angeles Acting US Attorney Bill Essayli said in a court filing that Rinderknechtâs Uber passengers on New Yearâs Eve recalled that he appeared agitated and sounded distraught that he had no plans for the evening after a failed relationship. A forensic review of Rinderknechtâs computer also revealed that he âbecame increasingly angry with his life and society at large,â according to prosecutors, who said he was âfixated on Luigi Mangione,â the Ivy League graduate regarded by many as an anti-corporate hero after he was charged with gunning down a health insurance executive in Manhattan in December 2024. When Rinderknecht was questioned by investigators days after the fire about why someone would commit arson in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood, prosecutors said, he âresponded it would be out of resentment of the rich enjoying their money as âweâre basically being enslaved by them.ââ US District Judge Anne Hwang, who is presiding over the trial, has blocked both sides from putting on evidence that she determined is either irrelevant or inflammatory.
